Joseph Giunta Canadian, 1911-2001
Further images
Painted c 1945, Winter Solitude Along the St. Lawrence River belongs to the early figurative period of Joseph Giunta’s long and evolving career. The painting reflects his interest in the landscapes and seasonal atmosphere of Quebec, capturing the quiet stillness of winter along the St. Lawrence. Works from this period demonstrate his strong academic training while already revealing a modern sensitivity to structure and design within the composition.
Joseph Giunta was born in Montreal in 1911 to parents of Sicilian origin and began studying art at an early age. At just fourteen he enrolled in evening drawing classes at the Monument-National, where he studied under Adrien Hébert and John Young Johnstone. Around 1930 he continued his studies at the École des Beaux-Arts de Montréal, working with instructors including Félix Maillard, Joseph St-Charles, and Edmond Dyonnet. Seeking further artistic development, Giunta later studied at the Copley Society of Art in Boston between 1935 and 1937.
Giunta began exhibiting his work in 1931 and quickly became part of the Montreal art community. During the 1930s his paintings appeared in exhibitions at the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts and at the Salon du Printemps organized by the Art Association of Montreal. His first solo exhibition took place in 1936 alongside Marc-Aurèle Fortin, marking an important moment in his early career. Over the decades Giunta would continue to exhibit widely, including at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and other galleries in Canada and abroad.
From roughly 1931 to 1958 Giunta worked primarily in a figurative style, producing landscapes, still lifes, portraits, and scenes of everyday life in Quebec. Paintings such as Winter Solitude Along the St. Lawrence River illustrate this phase of his work.
Provenance
- titled on artist label- private collection, Toronto